RyanF40T12
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we had rolling blackouts as they call it here back in the 90s, but were able to bring in more capacity with the addition of a few natural gas fueled power stations and conversions of a few old coal burners to natural gas with higher output equipment.
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The more you hate the LED movement, the stronger it becomes.
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Bulbman256
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Mad Max
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Collecting light bulbs since 2012, a madman since birth.
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wide-lite 1000
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Trust me , you'll NEVER get used to the cold temps ! I've been trying for 50 years !  I will say , I lived in Georgia for 8 years and I'd rather have 12°f and snowing than have 34°f and raining ! 
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Collector,Hoarder,Pack-rat! Clear mercury Rules!!
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HPS_250
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Long live the HPS and SOX!
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@Wide-Lite 1000 I’d actually like a high in the single digits right now! It was 112 degrees at my house today. I don’t know if I’d get used to temps that cold OR this hot, it’s so hard!  @RyanF40T12 : Most of the extra power to prevent even more rolling outages here comes from natural gas plants or solar panels.
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I’ve always been interested in all kinds of lighting, mainly incandescent and HID, and especially all kinds of sodium lamps (HPS/LPS). I’ll tolerate LED but I’m not a fan of it. I’m not proud to say that my city has Devolved to LED.
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wide-lite 1000
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No Thank You ! 
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Collector,Hoarder,Pack-rat! Clear mercury Rules!!
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HPS_250
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Long live the HPS and SOX!
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I’ve always been interested in all kinds of lighting, mainly incandescent and HID, and especially all kinds of sodium lamps (HPS/LPS). I’ll tolerate LED but I’m not a fan of it. I’m not proud to say that my city has Devolved to LED.
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wide-lite 1000
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Collector,Hoarder,Pack-rat! Clear mercury Rules!!
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Wireman
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Trust me , you'll NEVER get used to the cold temps ! I've been trying for 50 years ! I will say , I lived in Georgia for 8 years and I'd rather have 12°f and snowing than have 34°f and raining ! 
I agree. There's nothing worse than wet and cold. I remember starting work one morning and it was around 40 maybe 45 degrees and the shell of the building that we were attempting to wire was flooded with 4" of rain from the night before. Not to mention that the wind blowing through there wasn't doing my absolutely miserable cold any good either!
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HPS_250
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I agree. There's nothing worse than wet and cold. I remember starting work one morning and it was around 40 maybe 45 degrees and the shell of the building that we were attempting to wire was flooded with 4" of rain from the night before. Not to mention that the wind blowing through there wasn't doing my absolutely miserable cold any good either!
I’d have to say that I think the opposite is true for me in CA. Hot and dry is just plain bad here. I’m talking about huge power outages, temps of 110+, humidity in single digits, and possible uncontrollable fires. I really miss rain. There hasn’t been any since April! 
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I’ve always been interested in all kinds of lighting, mainly incandescent and HID, and especially all kinds of sodium lamps (HPS/LPS). I’ll tolerate LED but I’m not a fan of it. I’m not proud to say that my city has Devolved to LED.
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sox35
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Medved
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To be honest I was feeling better in the 40+ degC (in the shadow) heat of August in Arizona's deserts (just need a lot of water to drink, but otherwise feeling fine) then here in central Europe at 27..32degC summer (sweating like heck). Clearly the humidity makes a difference...
But fortunately here the utilities do not have to resort to the rolling blackouts to prevent the network from collapsing...
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No more selfballasted c***
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Wireman
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To be honest I was feeling better in the 40+ degC (in the shadow) heat of August in Arizona's deserts (just need a lot of water to drink, but otherwise feeling fine) then here in central Europe at 27..32degC summer (sweating like heck). Clearly the humidity makes a difference...
Arizona is a dry, desert heat, I can take that, for the most part. As you say, the killer is humidity. It's 63% here at the moment, which might not be excessive by Florida standards, but is way too much for me 
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Wireman
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Arizona is a dry, desert heat, I can take that, for the most part. As you say, the killer is humidity. It's 63% here at the moment, which might not be excessive by Florida standards, but is way too much for me 
63% humidity? As a true Floridian that's a nice day and lower than that it starts to feel like the dry desert of Arizona. It is the humidity that makes the difference! A summer afternoon here in Fort Lauderdale is around 90 degrees F with the humidity running around 75%! That creates a heat index (feels like temperature) of around 105. When I'm crawling through attics pulling electric cables it's well over a 150 inside them! It's interesting how the electric grid here can handle the summer air conditioning load but if gets to cold in the winter that's when problems can happen. Fortunately that isn't very often.
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Medved
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It's interesting how the electric grid here can handle the summer air conditioning load but if gets to cold in the winter that's when problems happen
Well, if the wiring is tightened during hot wheather, at cold it contracts and maybe get overtightened. Plus metsl gets more brittle at colder temperatures. But mostly, I think, it is not only the temperature (although people tend to blame mainly that), but the other weather effects, usually coming along in the area, which are the most devastating: Wind, heavy rains (so poles loose foundation strength, equipment "on its last leg" tend to break just when getting wet,...), sometimes ice buildup (adding many times extra weight and wind resistance; quite common problem here at winter),...
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No more selfballasted c***
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